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We have been developing and maintaining a complex web application on Grails since summer of 2008. By then Grails had passed the 1.0 release milestone and was really hot. A good 10 years later the application is still in use and we are trying to upgrade from Grails 2.4 to 3.3.

Upgrading Grails – a rough ride

Similar to pastupgradeexperiences the ride is not very smooth. Besides the major changes like the much welcomed switch to the gradle build system, interceptors instead of filters and streamlined configuration there are again a host of more subtle changes. The biggest problem for us though is the plugin situation.

It’s the plugins

In the past we had tough breaks like the abandoned selenium plugin in favor of the much better geb for functional testing. That had cost us a lot of work and many lost and not yet rewritten functional tests.

This time it seems especially hard because you two of our central plugins are not readily available anymore:

1. Shiro authentication

There still is no official release of the shiro plugin for Grails 3.x. After some searching and researching the initial port on github we decided to fork and maintain the most current forked version ourselves and try to work with it. Fortunately it was relatively easy to integrate and to update some dependencies. Our authentication and authorization works at least as good as before and we do not face additional problems. Working with interceptors feels quite good, too.

2. Search

The situation is harder with search. Compass and the searchable plugin are dead – plain and simple. The replacement for grails is the elasticsearch plugin which mostly adopted the API of the searchable plugin. Getting it to work is not that easy though. You have different versions depending on the grails 3 version you are targetting. Each plugin version targets a specific elasticsearch server version and so on. Often times (like in the default configuration) you will need a matching mapper-attachment plugin that is not available on maven in newer versions. This is mentioned somewhere in the midst of the plugin documentation.

Furthermore the plugin itself has some problems with hibernate proxies and concurrency so here we have to mess around with the plugin code once more. Once we have everything working for us like before we will try to get our patches upstream.

Marching forward

The upgrade from 2.x to 3.x is the biggest (and best) step of Grails into the right direction. On the downside it places a lot of burden on the application and plugin developers. That again increases the cost of maintaining proven applications further.

Right now we are close to a Grails 3.3 version of our application but have invested considerable effort into this upgrade.

Our current recommendation and practice is to not start new web applications based on the grails framework because there have been too many breaking changes and the maintainance cost is high. But we are keeping a close look at grails because the increased modularization and and new options like the grails-react-profile may keep grails interesting in the future.

Java is a peculiar programming language. It is used in lots of professional business cases and yet regarded as an easy language suitable for beginner studies. Java’s syntax in particular is criticized as bloated and overly strict and on the next blog praised as lenient and powerful. Well, lets have a look at a correct, runnable Java program that I like to show my students:

This Java code compiles, perhaps with some warnings about unlucky naming and can be run just fine. You might want to guess what its output to the console is. Notice that the code is quiet simple. No shenanigans with Java’s generics or the dark corners of lambda expressions and method handles. In fact, this code compiles and runs correctly since more than 20 years.

Lets dissect the code into its pieces. To really know what’s going on, you need to look into Java’s Language Specification, a magnificent compendium about everything that can be known about Java on the syntax level. If you want to dive even deeper, the Java Virtual Machine Specification might be your cup of tea. But be warned! Nobody on this planet understands everything in it completely. Even the much easier Java Language Specification contains chapters of pure magic, according to Joshua Bloch (you might want to watch the whole presentation, the statement in question is around the 6 minute mark). And in the code example above, we’ve used some of the magic, even if they are beginner level tricks.

What about the money?

The first glaring anomaly in the code is the strange names that are dollar signs or underscores. These are valid names, according to chapter 3.8 about Identifiers. And we’ve done great by choosing them. Let me quote the relevant sentence from this chapter:

“The “Java letters” include uppercase and lowercase ASCII Latin letters A-Z (\u0041-\u005a), and a-z (\u0061-\u007a), and, for historical reasons, the ASCII dollar sign ($, or \u0024) and underscore (_, or \u005f). The dollar sign should be used […]”

Oh, and by the way: Java identifiers are of unlimited length. You could go and write valid Java code that never terminates. We’ve gone the other way and made our names as short as possible – one character. Since identifiers are used as class names, method names, variable names and (implicitly) constructor names, we can name them all alike.

The variable name of the arguments in the main method used to be just an underscore, but somebody at Oracle changed this section of the Language Specification and added the following sentence:

“The underscore may be used in identifiers formed of two or more characters, but it cannot be used as a one-character identifier due to being a keyword.”

This change happened in Java 9. You can rename the variable “_$” to just “_” in Java 8 and it will work (with a warning).

URLs as first-class citizens?

The next thing that probably caught your eye is the URL in the first line of the constructor. It just stands there. And as I told you, the code compiles. This line is actually a combination of two things: A labeled statement and a comment. You already know about end-of-line comments that are started with a double slash. The rather unknown thing is the labeled statement before it, ending with a colon. This is one of the darker regions of the Language Specification, because it essentially introduces a poor man’s goto statement. And they knew it, because they explicitly talk about it:

“Unlike C and C++, the Java programming language has no goto statement; identifier statement labels are used with break…”

And this explains the weird line in the while loop: “break http” doesn’t command Java to do harm to the computer’s Internet connection, but to leave and complete the labeled statement, in our case the while loop. This spares us from the looming infinite loop, but raises another question: What names are allowed as labels? You’ve guessed it, it’s a Java identifier. We could have named our label “$:” instead of “http:” and chuckled about the line “break $”.

So, Java has a goto statement, but it isn’t called as such and it’s crippled to the point of being useless in practice. In my 20+ years of Java programming, I’ve seen it used just once in the wild.

What about it all?

This example of Java code serves me as a reminder that a programming language is what we make out of it. Our Java programs could easily all look like this if we wanted to. It’s not Java’s merit that our code is readable. And it’s not Java’s fault that we write bloated code. Both are results of our choices as programmers, not an inevitableness from the language we program in.

I sometimes venture to the darker regions of programming languages to see what the language could look and feel like if somebody makes the wrong decisions. This code example is from one of those little journeys several years ago. And it proved its worth once again when I tried to compile it with Java 9. Remember the addition in the Language Specification that made the single underscore a keyword? It wasn’t random. Java’s authors want to improve the lambda expressions in Project Amber, specifically in the JEP 302 (Lambda Leftovers). This JDK Enhancement Proposal (JEP) was planned for Java 10, is still not included in Java 11 and has no clear release date yet. My code gave me the motivation to dig into the topic and made me watch presentations like the one from Brian Goetz at Devoxx 2017 that’s really interesting and a bit unsettling.

Bending things until they break is one way to learn about their limits. What are your ways to learn about programming languages? Do you always stay in the middle lane? Leave a comment on your journeys.

you can initialize the properties directly when calling the constructor:

def example = new Example(text: ' This is an example. ')
assert example.text == ' This is an example. '

This is basically a shortcut for initializing the properties via explicit assignment:

def example = new Example()
example.text = ' This is an example. '
assert example.text == ' This is an example. '

So far so good.

Enter Grails

We use the aforementioned Grails framework for some of our web application projects. It is advertised on its website as featuring “convention-over-configuration” and “sensible defaults”. Grails uses the Groovy programming language, and a simple domain class looks just like a plain old Groovy class, except that it lives under the grails-app/domain directory (this is one of the convention-over-configuration aspects):

class Example {
String text
}

As expected, you can initialize the property via regular assignment:

def example = new Example()
example.text = ' This is an example. '
assert example.text == ' This is an example. '

So one might expect that you can initialize it via a named argument constructor call as well:

def example = new Example(text: ' This is an example. ')
assert example.text == ' This is an example. '

And indeed, you can. But what’s this? Our assertion fails:

assert example.text == ' This is an example. '
| |
| false
This is an example.

It is not directly obvious from the assertion failure output, but the property value is indeed no longer equal to the expected text: the leading and trailing spaces got trimmed!

I was surprised, but after some research in Grails documentation it turned out that it’s not a bug, but a feature. In the section on Data Binding, you can find the following sentence:

The mass property binding mechanism will by default automatically trim all Strings at binding time. To disable this behavior set the grails.databinding.trimStrings property to false in grails-app/conf/application.groovy.

Groovy’s named argument constructor feature is used as a data binding mechanism by Grails to bind web request parameters to a domain object. For this the default behavior was modified, so that strings are automatically trimmed. I can only guess that this is considered to be an instance of the “sensible defaults” mentioned on the Grails homepage.

To me personally this kind of surprising behavior is not a sensible default, and I think it goes against the Principle of least astonishement. I prefer consistency over “magic”.

luabind deboostified is a fork of the luabind project that helps exposing APIs to Lua. As the name implies, it replaces the boost dependency with modern C++, which makes it a lot more pleasant to work with.

Here are a few tips and tricks I learned while working with it. Some tricks might be applicable to the original luabind – I do not know.

1. Splitting module registration

You can split the registration code for different classes. I usually add a register function per class, like this:

This function can then be exported via luabind::def and used just like any other function. This is just the tip of the iceberg, though. For example, you can also write functions that, at runtime, behave differently when a number is passed in as when a table is passed in. You can find out the Lua type with luabind::type(myObject).

Of course, as soon as you want to create new objects to return to Lua, you need the lua_State pointer in that function. Using the interpreter from a passed-in luabind::object is one way, but I have yet to find another pleasant way to do this. It is probably possible to use the policies to do this, and have them pass that in as a special parameter, but for now I am using some complicated machinery to bind lambda functions that capture the Lua interpreter.

That’s it for now..

Keep in mind that these are not thoroughly researched best-practices, but patterns I have used to solve actual problems. There might be better solutions out there – if you know any, please let me know. Hope this helped!

Client side web development is a fast-changing world. JavaScript libraries and frameworks come and go monthly. A couple of years ago jQuery was a huge thing, then AngularJS, and nowadays people use React or Vue.js with a state container like Redux. And so do we for new projects. Unfortunately, these modern client-side frameworks are based on the npm ecosystem, which is notoriously known for its dependency bloat. Even if you only have a couple of direct dependencies the package manager lock file will list hundreds of indirect dependencies. Experience has shown that lots of dependencies will result in a maintenance burden as time passes, especially when you have to do major version updates. Also, as mentioned above, frameworks come and then go out of fashion, and the maintainers of a framework move on to their next big thing pet project, leaving you and your project sitting on a barely or no longer maintained base, and frameworks can’t be easily replaced, because they tend to permeate every aspect of your application.

With this frustrating experience in mind we recently did an experiment for a new medium sized web project. We avoided frameworks and the npm ecosystem and only used JavaScript libraries with no or very few indirect dependencies, which really were necessary. Browsers have become better at being compatible to web standards, at least regarding the basics. Libraries like jQuery and poly-fills that paper over the incompatibilities can mostly be avoided — an interesting resource is the website You Might Not Need jQuery.

We still organised our views as components, and they are communicating via a very simple event dispatcher. Some things had to be done by foot, but not too much. It works, although the result is not as pure as it would have been with declarative views as facilitated by React and a functional state container like Redux. We’re still fans of the React+Redux approach and we’re using it happily (at least for now) for other projects, but we’re also skeptical regarding the long term costs, especially from relying on the npm ecosystem. Which approach will result in less maintenance burden? We don’t know yet. Time will tell.

The new Javascript Fetch API is really nice addition to the language and my preferable, and in fact the only bearable, way to do server requests.
The Promise based API is a lot nicer than older, purely callback-based, approaches.

The usual approach to get a text response from a server using the Fetch API looks like this:

I was building a client application that reads weather data from a small embedded device. We did not have direct access to changing the functionality of that device, but we could upload static pages to it, and use its existing HTML API to query the amount of registered rainfall and lightning strikes.

Using the fetch API, I quickly got the data and extracted it from the HTML but some of the identifiers had some screwed up characters that looked like decoding problems. So I checked whether the HTTP Content-Type was set correctly in the response. To my surprise it was correctly set as Content-Type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1.

So why did my Javascript Application not get that? After some digging, it turned out that Response’s text() function always decodes the payload as utf-8. The mismatch between that and the charset explained the problem!

Obviously, I had to do the decoding myself. The solution I picked was to use the TextDecoder class. It can decode an ArrayBuffer with a given encoding. Luckily, that is easy to get from the response:

Since I only had to support that single encoding, that worked well for me. Keep in mind that the TextDecoder is still experimental Technology. However, we had a specific browser as a target and it works there. Lucky us!

The setting

We are developing and maintaining an important web application for one of our clients. Our application scrapes a web page and embeds our own content into that page frame.

One day our client told us of an additional block of elements at the bottom of each page. The block had a heading “Image Credits” and a broken image link strangely labeled “inArray”. We did not change anything on our side and the new blocks were not part of the HTML code of the pages.

Ok, so some new Javascript code must be the source of these strange elements on our pages.

The investigation

I started the investigation using the development tools of the browser (using F12). A search for the string “Image Credits” instantly brought me to the right place: A Javascript function called on document.ready(). The code was basically getting all images with a copyright attribute and put the findings in an array with the text as the key and the image url as the value. Then it would iterate over the array and add the copyright information at the bottom of each page.

But wait! Our array was empty and we had no images with copyright attributes. Still the block would be put out. I verified all this using the debugger in the browser and was a bit puzzled at first, especially by the strange name “inArray” that sounded more like code than some copyright information.

The cause

Then I looked at the iteration and it struck me like lightning: The code used for (name in copyrightArray) to iterate over the elements. Sounds correct, but it is not! Now we have to elaborate a bit, especially for all you folks without a special degree in Javascript coding:

In Javascript there is no distinct notion of associative arrays but you can access all enumerable properties of an object using square brackets (taken from Mozillas Javascript docs):

In the case of an array the indices are “just enumerable properties with integer names and are otherwise identical to general object properties“.

So in our case we had an array object with a length of 0 and a property called inArray. Where did that come from? Digging further revealed that one of our third-party libraries added a function to the array prototype like so:

The solution

Usually you would iterate over an array using the integer index (old school) or better using the more modern and readable for…of (which also works on other iterable types). In this case that does not work because we do not use integer indices but string properties. So you have to use Object.keys().forEach() or check with hasOwnProperty() if in your for…in loop if the property is inherited or not to avoid getting unwanted properties of prototypes.

The takeaways

Iteration in Javascript is hard! See this lengthy discussion…The different constructs are named quite similar an all have subtle differences in behaviour. In addition, libraries can mess with the objects you think you know. So finally some advice from me:

Arrays are only true arrays with positive integer indices/property names!

Do not mess with the prototypes of well known objects, like our third-party library did…

Use for…of to iterate over true arrays or other iterables

Do not use associative arrays if other options are available. If you do, make sure to check if the properties are own properties and enumerable.